Pickled Dilly Beans (Dill Pickled Green Beans)

My first dilly beans were given to me by a true native Vermonter. I mean ancestors back to the Abenaki old school Vermonter. Beard so big you couldn’t see his chest mountain man Vermonter. And here he was telling me. “You gotta be kidding me girl. You ain’t never had dilly beans before? What’s wrong with your girl? You don’t know NOTHIN’ about good food.”

He went inside to get some of his mama’s old fashioned dilly beans, because if there’s one good thing about green beens it’s they’re prolific, so there’s always spare to be handed out to a flatlander that needs an education on good food.

I’ll admit, I was down right knock your socks off impressed. I make a pretty spectacular pickle, but I could eat dilly beans all day long and never miss a pickle. The texture is crisp and firm, and there’s something about a green bean that absorbs and complements dill better than any pickle I’ve ever had. A bit of garlic and a hint of spice from red pepper flakes, and you’ve got yourself a well rounded taste that’s hard to put down.

When I asked for the recipe, I was told that “mama don’t need no recipe for them dilly beans.” But I got rough proportions and an idea, and went looking on my own. After trying a number, I settled on this down right perfect recipe from The All New Ball Book of Canning and Preserving. It’s a good approximation of my first dilly bean. Try it and let me know what you think.

Wash beans and trim the stem ends. Trim both ends if you like uniformity, but the tail end is the tender end so you can leave it intact. I start by measuring one bean to 1 inch below jar height, and then cut them all to the same length so they pack well into the jar.

Pack the green beans into wide mouth pint jars and top each jar with 1/4 tsp. red pepper flakes, 2 dill sprigs and 1-2 garlic cloves. Be sure to leave just over 1/2 inch headspace.

Combine vinegar, water and canning salt and bring to a boil on the stove to make a hot brine. Pour the hot brine over the beans in jars, leaving 1/2 inch headspace.

Seal the jars with new canning lids, tighten on bands, and process in a water bath canner for 10 minutes adjusting for altitude.

Remove the jars from the canner and allow to stand at room temperature for a few hours until they’ve “popped” and completely sealed. Store any unsealed jars in the fridge and use immediately.

For sealed jars, remove the canning bands and store in the pantry at room temperature.

Enjoy!

Just getting Started Canning?

If you’re just getting started canning, but plan on making canning and preserving food part of your lifestyle long term, try investing in an online canning course. Pioneering today has a canning with confidence course that takes you through the ins and outs of canning from basic canning safety all the way through to pressure canning meat at home. The course covers:

Canning Safety – Safe techniques to for home canning

Water Bath Canning – Jams, jellies, pickles, tomatoes, and other high acid fruits and vegetables including low sugar, no pectin variations.

Pressure Canning – How to safely operate a pressure canner at home to can almost any type of food for long term preservation

Troubleshooting and Storage – Figuring out why a recipe just didn’t work, and maximizing storage of your home canned goods.

Take a look at Canning with Confidence if you’re planning on investing heavily in long term home food preservation.

Home canned dill green beans were something my mother was especially good at canning. We grew up on her home canned pickles, dill green beans, fruits and veggies. This makes me miss my childhood days but remember then fondly.

Hello- I canned the dilly beans a few weeks back. I followed the recipe exactly; however, they taste very bitter. I can’t quite put my finger on what is missing. Could you please weigh in with your thoughts on what I’ve done wrong? Thank you, Sarah

My first thought was that maybe the green beans were a bit too old? They get a little bitter if they’re left on the plant too long, and that’ll really come through if they’re canned. The seeds inside should still be very small, tiny little specs. Even if picked on time, they’ll still get a bit bitter if they’re in the fridge too long waiting to be canned (or on the grocery store shelf too long).

If that doesn’t sound like the issue, I did a bit of research and here’s what the ball canning website has to say about bitter pickled vegetables:

“This happens when you use old spices, cook too long in vinegar, or you use too much spice. Use fresh spices – use whole spices within 3-4 years of purchase. Use the processing time and method recommended in the tested fresh preserving recipe. You may have used vinegar that was too strong. Always use vinegar with 5% acidity for fresh preserving. Using a salt substitute in place of Salt for Pickling & Preserving could be the problem. Salt substitutes contain potassium chloride, which is naturally bitter.” (source: https://www.freshpreserving.com/pickles-problem-solver.html)

Yes! That’s happened to me a time or two as well. I don’t use the green dried dill tops in canning (mainly because it always smells like alfalfa from the stores around here, too old I think). I’ve just substituted a good amount of dill seed instead of the fresh dill and they come out great. Smell the dill seed and make sure it has a good strong smell to it, it loses potency quick and old stuff (even a year old) doesn’t taste like much.

Hello! I just finished pulling these out of the water bath, and I can’t WAIT to try them! How long do the green beans need to sit in the juice before they have the flavor of being pickled? I’d like to open one asap. Thanks!

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